On 15/08/2006, at 6:58 PM, Thinus van Rensburg wrote:

Now this is puzzling me - I thought that Australia was lagging very far
behind the rest of the developed world - I realise that this is not
necessarily a representative sample of all users in the countries on
this list but I'm pretty impressed by the Australian results - am I
missing something here?

I'm not sure there's a big enough sample here. Check out the speeds available in different countries: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ Broadband_Internet_access_worldwide Japan is leading the world with their fibre penetration but such a lot of high bandwidth presents the problem of the ISPs running out of bandwidth.

I am disappointed by my own results - the best download speed I get here
in Canberra is about 3.2 Mbps and up around 0.7 Mbps. The same plan
gives other users in the Sydney area 20Mbps down and 0.9 up.

You're doing a lot better than most of the country. Broadband is defined as anything faster then 256kb p/s download. I think the line should be drawn at 512kb p/s upload, the speed with which it becomes useful for more then web browsing and e-mail.

cheers,
Peter.
_______________________________________________
Gpcg_talk mailing list
[email protected]
http://ozdocit.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/gpcg_talk

Reply via email to